U.S. State Department takes action against violators of religious freedomMore than two decades ago, the United States made a significant commitment to promoting religious freedom as a foreign policy objective with the passage of the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 (IRFA Act). Designed to “strengthen United States advocacy on behalf of, individuals persecuted in foreign countries on account of religion,” the law authorized “actions in response to violations of religious freedom in foreign countries.” The act also requires that the Secretary of State identify “countries of particular concern,” a designation reserved for nation’s guilty of particularly severe violations of religious freedom. The classification is used for countries that have committed “particularly severe violations of religious freedom,” including violations such as:
On Monday, the State Department released this year’s list of offenders. The countries of particular concern are Burma, China, Eritrea, Iran, Nigeria, North Korea, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan. Nigeria was the only new addition for 2020. This Week at the ERLC
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![]() News From Capitol HillAs President Trump's term and the 116th Congress comes to an end, the ERLC is advocating for a variety of policies now as we also look ahead to President-elect Biden’s inauguration and the sitting of the 117th Congress in 2021. During this Lame Duck session of Congress, the ERLC is advocating for critical policies like protecting the Hyde Amendment in the appropriations negotiations, as well as COVID-19 relief measures the charitable sector desperately needs. Looking ahead at the incoming Biden Administration, there are areas where the ERLC hopes to work together in an effort to seek national healing from the pandemic with just and unifying policies which respect religious liberty rights and First Amendment protections. Then there are also areas of policy where the ERLC expects to be steadfast in opposition, based on our biblical convictions, to some of the Biden Administration’s efforts. Interestingly, the fate of the Senate remains unclear pending the Georgia Senate runoffs. Thus, the ERLC policy team is waiting to release it’s annual legislative agenda until mid-January after the Georgia election results and the balance of power on Capitol Hill is known. While the planning for policy advocacy is important to our work, Travis Wussow, who leads the ERLC’s policy work, reiterated on this week’s Capitol Conversations podcast, what matters most:
On the WeeklyTech podcast, Michael Sacasas, associate director for Educational Programming at the Christian Study Center of Gainesville, joins Jason Thacker to talk about the philosophy of technology and some of the most influential thinkers and writers in this area from the past. On the Capitol Conversations podcast, Chelsea Patterson Sobolik and Travis Wussow join Jeff Pickering for a conversation about the ERLC’s priorities for the Lame Duck Congress and the Biden Administration. Then, China expert Michael Sobolik joins to discuss the Chinese Communist Party politics, the history of the U.S. China relationship, and what it means for human rights advocacy today. From The Public SquareHouse Resolution Calls For International Repeal of Blasphemy, Heresy and Apostasy Law
Supreme Court rejects appeal to limit transgender students
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